What I like most about St. Louis is...Billy Croghan: The Mississippi river and the culture it dropped here along with it. We've got a really cool heritage -- musical and otherwise -- because of where we are. Not every city has what amounts to industrial-era ruins, but I think they lend a certain grit to the general aesthetic here that's both heartbreaking and endearing.

I make music because... I have to. The impulse to make music is completely erratic and binding at the same time.

The St. Louis music scene could use... Fewer substances and more national attention. Some really cool music is going on here nightly, but St. Louis has some kind of inferiority complex, so bands from out of town get way more high-fives at the clubs. I've been out here in St. Louis and out of town and seen what some of the same bands from everywhere else are doing, and I'm not sure why we don't realize how cool the stuff going on right here is. That isn't to blow smoke because of course there is bottom-of-the-barrel stuff going on here too, but there really is topnotch and nationally viable entertainment here every night.

The best post-show food in St. Louis is... This one is tough, and it depends on what part of town you're in. I personally dig the Buttery on South Grand. They certainly earn their name -- I think the even the windows are buttered. If you're somewhere further east, Billie's Fine Foods is always a good time, and if you've been honored to get a gig at the Focal Point, you gotta stop in to Tiffany's. Really, as long as the food is greasy and the service is surly, you know you're in the right place.

The most memorable show I've ever played... Wow, this one is ancient, but in high school, we were playing this battle of the bands at Lindbergh High School. We got about halfway through our set, and I dropped an F-bomb onstage because something was "f-ing awesome" and didn't think anything of it. Then I started playing the next song. When I stepped up to the mic and started singing, it was off, and then the whole system was off. Then the principal of the school got up onstage screaming at us to get offstage. They kicked us right out of the gym that day. That was certainly the most memorable show I've ever played. I don't know what happened to half of those guys.

The most difficult lesson I've learned while playing music is... It seems a bit self-indulgent for me to say I've learned anything difficult from actually playing music, but I've certainly learned about life through music. Simple stuff, like people aren't always nice and you gotta push super hard for a long time before the ball gets rolling. I think everyone should do something entrepreneurial at some point just to get a little taste of the grind musicians experience. As long as you're in for the constant mental and sometimes physical abuse, music is darn near the most fun thing anybody can put his heart into.